The movie features a young couple (Nathaniel Brown and Byrdie Bell) who go to a bar one night and meet a young creature of a boy (Luke Worrall) possessed of an otherworldly physical beauty that could attract anyone, man or woman.

Brown commented on his concept: “Something that really interests me is this extreme of youthful male beauty that the fashion world constantly seeks. We’re not talking handsome or hunky or even sexually attractive, but the truly beautiful male faces possessed by a Luke Worrall or a Cole Mohr—kind of unusual and alien to the point that you could call them art and say they belong in gallery. It transcends gay or straight—anyone who comes across them wants to stare at them, like they’d want to stare at incredible art.”

Lustralboy remembers the Dazed and Confused byline: “Not everything is black or white.” We concur that “Not everything is straight or gay.”

A young couple (Nathaniel Brown and Byrdie Bell) goes to a bar one night and meets a young creature of a boy (Luke Worrall). This boy possesses an otherworldly physical beauty that could attract anyone, man or woman. And indeed, the young couple is attracted, one more so than the other. What does this chance meeting do to their relationship? Bad things? Enlightening things? Difficult things? Or perhaps through adversity they will find quiet strength.